James Douglas: How Do You Remember Buster?

By James Slater - 02/11/2019 - Comments

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James Douglas has, as we all know, a unique place in the annals of boxing history. But how do you remember “Buster?” Do you, when hearing the former champ’s name, instantly think of the stunner Douglas pulled off against the “unbeatable” Mike Tyson – some 29 long years ago today! – or do you think of the numerous flops Douglas gave the sport?

We’re well acquainted with what went down in Tokyo, Japan on February 11, when Douglas shocked the entire world with his tenth-round KO win over an unbeaten Mike Tyson. How sensational Douglas looked that night. So good that today, some fans do wonder how great Douglas could have been had he fought with as much passion, as much heart, as much desire in every fight.

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Could Buster have been one of the best ever, or did he merely put everything in place for one night only against an overconfident, ill-trained, mentally unfocused champion? Douglas seemed to have the full package. At 6’3,” he was a big, strong heavyweight, he had a fine left jab, a good chin, effective punching power, skill and natural talent. When he was in top shape, Douglas also had a good engine. But that was the problem: getting Douglas into top shape, mentally and physically. The man from Columbus, Ohio did give his talents the respect they deserved ahead of the Tyson fight – inspired as we know by the recent death of his mother – and he trained like a true champion. But this was very much a one night only affair; Buster never pushed himself as hard again – nor had he ever worked so hard before.

And due to this it’s hard to say one way or the other how good Douglas could have been. Discipline and desire as as important as punching power, speed, or any other attributes a fighter may have. Had we seen an immediate Douglas-Tyson rematch, it’s extremely likely “Iron Mike” would have regained his crown in pretty swift fashion. We all saw how pathetically out of shape a now enormously rich Douglas was in his next fight after Tyson, the disastrous defence against Evander Holyfield. Had Tyson met this version of Douglas, the fight would not have lasted a single round.

However, if Douglas had worked his ass off in training and had somehow managed to remain ultra-motivated and strong, we might have seen Buster beat Holyfield (maybe in a somewhat similar fight to the epic Riddick Bowe-Holyfield fight) and then repeat the win over Tyson (maybe via decision victory, Tyson being fully fit himself in the rematch). But of course, this is mere conjecture and absolutely nothing more.

We will never know how great Douglas could perhaps have been. But if it’s frustrating for us, imagine what it must be for the man himself. Greatness, true greatness is hard to come by in any field. James Douglas was, maybe, just maybe, within inches of achieving it in the toughest sport in the world.

If you can stand it, slide a copy of the Douglas/Tyson fight into your VCR machine today and recall what a fit, focused and turned on Douglas could really do.